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Designed by Erich Mollowitz in two weights and
first cast in 1936 — by J.D. Trennert
as Rheingold and by C.E. Weber as
Forelle. Kobundo had it as Grace
Script, Funtimod as Eldorado.
[Reichardt] Stephenson Blake’s version was
named Mercury. The Brits altered a few characters
that apparently were perceived as too Germanic, including the
stemless ‘d’, and the ‘Z/z’ and ‘7’ with crossbars. Changes further
affected ‘E’, ‘F’ and ‘M’. [Jaspert]

Dieter Steffmann digitized the bolder Forelle
Auszeichnung and published it as a free font (2000). The same
weight is available from More…

Designed by Erich Mollowitz in two weights and first cast in 1936 — by J.D. Trennert as Rheingold and by C.E. Weber as Forelle. Kobundo had it as Grace Script, Funtimod as Eldorado. [Reichardt] Stephenson Blake’s version was named Mercury. The Brits altered a few characters that apparently were perceived as too Germanic, including the stemless ‘d’, and the ‘Z/z’ and ‘7’ with crossbars. Changes further affected ‘E’, ‘F’ and ‘M’. [Jaspert]

Dieter Steffmann digitized the bolder Forelle Auszeichnung and published it as a free font (2000). The same weight is available from Mecanorma (Trip Productions BV, 2004). Ralph M. Unger digitized both weights as Forelle Pro (RMU, 2010). This version has alternate forms for ‘d’ and ‘T’ and provides the original forms as swash alternates.

Jaunty Gent is a loose interpretation by Nick Curtis, based on Rheingold.